A second Camp Lejeune Marine accused of urinating on dead Taliban corpses in Afghanistan will face trial by special court-martial on Camp Lejeune this week.

Staff Sgt. Edward Deptola, of 3rd Battalion, 2nd Marine Regiment, 2nd Marine Division, will stand trial on Wednesday for violations of the Uniform Code of Military Justice and his alleged involvement in the desecration of human casualties and posing for unofficial photographs with human casualties, according to a press release from Marine Corps Combat Development Command.

The incident, which allegedly occurred during a counterinsurgency operation near Sandala, Musa Qala District in Helmand Province, Afghanistan in July 2011, was videotaped and uploaded to YouTube last January. The video showed what appeared to be four Marines urinating on the corpses of two dead Taliban soldiers.

Deptola is also charged with other alleged misconduct that took place during the same operation, including being derelict in his duties by failing to properly supervise junior Marines, failing to require junior Marines to wear their personal protective equipment, failing to stop and report the misconduct of junior Marines, failing to report the negligent discharge of a grenade launcher, failing to stop the indiscriminate firing of weapons, failing to stop the unnecessary damaging of Afghan compounds and wrongfully and indiscriminately firing a recovered enemy machine gun, according to the release.

Another Camp Lejeune Marine has already pleaded guilty to some of the charges Deptola will face on Wednesday.

On Dec. 19, then-Staff Sgt. Joseph Chamblin pleaded guilty to Article 134 of the UCMJ, General Article, for charges of urinating on the body of a deceased enemy combatant and was reduced in rank to sergeant/E-5 and required to forfeit $500 from his pay, according to a December press release from Marine Corps Combat Development Command. Chamblin also pleaded guilty to Article 92 of the UCMJ, Dereliction, for failing to properly supervise junior Marines and wrongfully posing for photographs with human casualties, according to the release.

Three other Marines allegedly involved in the incident received nonjudicial punishment in August for their misconduct in the video. Marine officials said because there were other pending cases related to the same incident, they will not discuss evidence or specific findings of the investigations.